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Diabetes-friendly food guide

Is Strawberries Good for Diabetes?

Low glycemic load — moderate post-meal glucose response. Fits comfortably in T2D meal plans. Glycemic index 40; glycemic load 4 per typical 1 cup strawberries.

For diabetes
DIABETES-FRIENDLY
Glycemic index
40
Glycemic load (per serving)
4

The diabetes-relevant numbers

Portion Carbs (g) Fiber (g) Net carbs Protein (g) GL
1 cup strawberries (~152g) 12 3 9.0 1 4
100g strawberries 7.7 2 5.7 0.7 2
8 medium strawberries 11 2.9 8.1 1 3
1 large strawberry (~18g) 1.4 0.4 1.0 0.1 0
1/2 cup sliced 5.8 1.5 4.3 0.5 2

Pairing strategies to blunt the glucose response

For people with type 2 diabetes, prediabetes, and insulin resistance, four evidence-based pairing strategies allow you to eat almost any food while keeping post-meal glucose excursions manageable:

Portion control — the simplest lever

The difference between a low-GL and high-GL serving is often just portion size, not food identity. For people with T2D, halving the typical serving of any high-GL food usually brings it into the low-medium GL range. A practical workflow: identify the foods that reliably spike your CGM, halve the standard portion, observe the new spike pattern, adjust from there.

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Frequently asked questions

Can people with diabetes eat strawberries?
Yes — strawberries has favourable glycemic properties (GI 40, GL 4 per typical serving). It fits well into T2D and prediabetes meal plans.
Does strawberries raise blood sugar?
For the typical 1 cup strawberries (~152g), glycemic load is approximately 4. CGM-tracked subjects typically see only a modest glucose rise (20–35 mg/dL above baseline at 60 minutes). Individual response varies — consider tracking your own CGM data if you have access to one to dial in personal portion sizes.
How should I incorporate this food into a diabetes meal plan?
Three reliable strategies. First, watch the portion — the difference between low-GL and high-GL is often just smaller serving size. Second, pair with protein and vegetables before the carb portion of the meal: Shukla 2015 in Diabetes Care showed eating vegetables and protein 15 minutes before carbs reduces post-meal glucose by 29%. Third, add fat — 10–15g of olive oil, avocado, or nuts slows gastric emptying and blunts the glucose peak by 20–40%. These pairing strategies allow most foods to fit in a glucose-conscious eating plan, even higher-GL ones at controlled portions.
What's the difference between A1C and post-meal glucose?
Fasting glucose is a snapshot — your glucose at one moment. A1C is the percentage of hemoglobin glycated over the past 90 days, integrating fasting + post-meal + overnight values. Post-meal glucose excursions contribute significantly to A1C, so meals that consistently spike glucose above 140 mg/dL will push A1C up even when fasting glucose looks fine. CGM data shows the full picture; for the lab equivalent of CGM data, request fasting insulin alongside fasting glucose to compute HOMA-IR — the earliest detectable signal of insulin resistance.
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